Steve Aoki is much more than an electro house musician, record producer, music executive and social media star. Add to that long list of accomplishments hyperactive entrepreneur.

In the five days since TheWrap called Steve Aoki in Croatia, has played for thousands of fans at gigs in Wisconsin, South Beach and Ibiza, Spain. By the time his properly titled documentary “I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead,” chronicling his workaholic life, arrives on Netflix today (Aug. 19), he will have played the “Crazy Sense Festival” in Hannover, Germany.

Three years in the making, “I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead” strays from the stage swallowing cryogenic blasts, pyrotechnic waterfalls and his own signature move — tossing sheet cakes in the faces of begging fans — that his 3.9 million Instagram followers feast on via multiple Aoki posts a day.

“It’s got paint brushes of EDM in it,” Aoki told TheWrap, “but it’s less about that and more of a personal story.”

In the underground scene of early 2000’s Hollywood, Aoki and pal DJ AM hosted Lady Gaga, Afrojack and Justice’s first L.A. performances at their Banana Split Sunday parties. Aoki’s personal mission at the time was to earn the professional respect of his father, the late Rocky Aoki.

Along with setting world records for hot air balloon stunts and racing boats, dad Rocky Aoki founded the successful restaurant chain Benihana. But he found little confidence in his son’s music entrepreneurship and even told him to “get a job.”

File footage of the elder Aoki stings, as he preaches that, “Business comes number one, health comes number two and family comes number three.” Steve’s sweet moments with family in Japan and the quiet moments huddling with family in the shadows of his milestone career performances upend his late father’s rankings.

The non-stop pace of the producer on display in the 82-minute documentary undercuts the casually ignorant accusations lobbed at Aoki and his EDM peers over social media — that they are overpaid button pushers.

Aoki embraces these oft-repeated critiques in the film, including social media potshots like: “My favorite part is when he hits play on his iPhone.”

“To this day, when I’m sitting on the jet, I still can’t believe I’m sitting on a jet,” Aoki says, adding that it is chartered and is a necessity rather than a luxury.

“I never thought that I would be flying a private jet from show to show. I’m just like ‘holy s—,'” Aoki laughs. “This is like an actual part of life now, that in order for me to get from Point A to Point B to Point Z in a short period of time, I don’t even have a choice. I have to fly in order to get to these places or else I can’t play all these different shows.”

That said, Aoki remembers where he came from and how it all began.

“I remember being in a sh–y run-down van, with four smelly dudes, and we hadn’t showered for a long time. We would sleep in that van. We would eat in that van. We didn’t sh– in that van, but we practically do everything else. We would tour and make $25 a show, and we were f—king happy.”

Kygo, Deadmau5 and Steve Aoki are three of EDM's power players at Ultra in Miami on the weekend of March 18-20, 2016.

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Sure, it's a single genre festival, but before you dismiss it remember this: Bieber's appearance with Jack U collaborators Diplo and Skrillex to close the 2015 edition was the world debut of the "Where Are U Now" phenomenon. At the time, the Biebs' appearance had been reported as a "joke" or a fluke...

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...but by the next morning the troika were on an in-studio radio tour launching the song that led to the comeback year for the part-time bad boy. The collaboration won a Grammy and went platinum in eight countries. So...

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...who to keep your eye on this year? DJ Snake for one. The "Turn Down for What" producer is back with hit "Middle" and will be playing Coachella next month. He had a key slot on Friday night, March 18.

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Martin Garrix (center) was a fan in the crowd at Ultra just three years ago. On Friday night, March 18, he closed out the main stage with a slew of new songs debuted for the first time. He hung with Blasterjaxx at BMF and iHeart's Lounge at the W in South Beach before his set.

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Prydz and the feisty social media provocateur Deadmau5. The mau5-man put down his phone long enough to check in to SiriusXM's live broadcast at the 1 Hotel in South Beach where several Ultra performers took a spin on the decks.

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Before Tiesto had a standout sunset set on Saturday (with Chainsmokers, Oliver Heldens, Vassy, and Delaney Jane all making surprise appearances), he rode a BLADE private speed boat across the bay from South Beach to arrive at the festival grounds. The transpo app is best known for its NYC helicopter-on-demand service, similar to Uber.

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Kaskade has no empty. After playing early on Friday night in Miami, he was set to play the twin Lollapaloozas happening simultaneously this weekend in Buenos Aires, Argentina and Chile on back-to-back days.

Aussie Nervo sisters hoist a cake. The year 2016 marks 10 years of shoulder events at Ultra.

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The main stage set resembles giant speakers.

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Had Red Foo and tennis pro girlfriend Victoria Azarenka not broken up, he would have had a tough choice this weekend. Azarenka faces Serena Williams on Sunday in the finals of the BNP Paribas tournament in Indian Wells.

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Disclosure gets in to the south Florida racquet sports lifestyle at the W, where NFL player Reggie Bush also stopped by.

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Ultra is in downtown Miami. The arrival and departure is an urban hike.

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On the day of his Friday set, Kygo (right) released new music with Labrinth (left). The duo performed the just released single "Fragile".

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In just a few years, Afrojack has joined Paul Oakenfold as one of dance music's elder statesmen. He's 28.

Mikey Glazer is always on the list. He’s been covering events since his kindergarten’s Valentine’s Day cookie party, graduating to become a nightly insider on Hollywood party circuit. He has contributed from behind the velvet rope for E! Entertainment Radio, US Weekly, and created the popular live celebrity sightings twitter @CelebSightings. Please send invitations here.